Julien Vervaecke

Julien Vervaecke
Personal information
Full nameJulien Vervaecke
Born(1899-11-03)3 November 1899
Dadizele, Belgium
DiedMay 1940 (aged 40)
Roncq, France
Team information
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Major wins
Paris–Roubaix
Paris–Brussels

Julien Vervaecke (3 November 1899 – May 1940) was a Belgian professional road bicycle racer. He won Paris–Roubaix, Paris–Brussels, 2 stages in the Tour de France and finished 3rd in the 1927 Tour de France. At the start of the Second World War Battle of Belgium, when a British army detachment withdrawing from the area and in the process of blowing up a bridge at Menen, where Vervaecke owned a restaurant. The British wanted to get furniture from the establishment in order to set up a roadblock, but he refused. The situation heated up because the bad temper of Vervaecke, added to the fact that he speak a poor English. He was arrested by the soldiers, taken to Park Torris in Roncq and shot dead. His body was found weeks later, so the exact date of his death is not known.

The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau investigated the case as an allied war crime.

Vervaecke was born in Dadizele, Belgium, and died in Roncq, France.

Julien's younger brother, Félicien Vervaecke, was also a successful cyclist.